Sophie Milman Shows

About Sophie Milman

Barely 24 years old, Sophie Milman has already seen and done more than many people twice her age. Since her self-titled debut was released in 2004, it has sold almost 100,000 copies worldwide, hit the Billboard Top 5 in Canada and the Top 15 in the United States, and topped the iTunes jazz charts in five different territories. Meanwhile, Sophie has maintained a rigorous touring schedule  headlining sold-out shows in Canada, the U.S., Mexico, Japan, and throughout Europe  and continued to balance her burgeoning music career with her commerce studies at the University of Toronto.

In short, its been a three-year whirlwind. And, with the release of her much-anticipated new album, Make Someone Happy, the time has finally come for Sophie Milman to reflect on it all.

Make Someone Happy is an expression of Sophie transformed. With each track, it tells a tale of her past, her present, and a future filled with pride, fear, excitement and passion:

While the first album dealt with my youth spent migrating through different countries and cultures, and the passion for jazz that helped see me through it, Make Someone Happy is about my life transformed over the last three years. This album reflects intense feelings and a time spent trying to make everyone happy  family, friends, loved ones, and my fans.

Sophies story continues to inspire. After emigrating from Russia to Israel with her family at the tender age of 7, then moving again at 16 to seek a new life in Canada, the transition from bookish teenager to glamorous jazz ingénue was perhaps unlikely. It was the offer of a recording contract after just three or four professional singing engagements that touched off a series of events that soon found this beautiful, multilingual talent gracing the cover of Voir, Klublife, Wholenote, and The Globe & Mail. She was featured in publications across the globe as well including Hello!, Q, Jazz Times, Elle Magazine, and the San Francisco Chronicle, and appearing on Entertainment Tonight, CBC, CTV, the BBC, BET Jazz, NPR, and several NBC and Fox affiliates across the U.S.

Before long, Sophie had earned a 2006 Juno Award nomination for Best Jazz Vocal Album and was appearing on stage with international musical superstars like Aaron Neville and the Neville Brothers, Chick Corea, and Jesse Cook. A triumphant return home to Toronto in October 2006 yielded an acclaimed iTunes EP, Live at the Winter Garden Theatre, which debuted at #1 upon its release in Canada and dominated the jazz charts in several territories for weeks at a time. It also brought Sophie some of her most effusive critical praise to date:

Milman clearly fits the template for Hot Young Chanteuse, being stylish, good-looking, and vocally gifted. When shes good, shes very, very good. – J.D. Considine, The Globe and Mail, October 30, 2006.

Two and a half years of touring the world have deepened and strengthened the collaboration between Sophie and her band, led by multi-instrumentalist, composer and arranger Cameron Wallis, and featuring Paul Shrofel on piano, John Fraboni on drums, and newest member Kieran Overs on bass. The opportunity to build a relationship with her bandmates and collaborators  another of the many firsts of the past few years  provided a fertile environment for the creation of Make Someone Happy. From the development of a concept to the actual recording of the album, Sophie and her band cultivated an atmosphere of comfort and creativity where Sophie could express who and where she truly is today in her career, her life, and her music.

Juno Award-winning producer Steven MacKinnon (Marc Jordan, Molly Johnson, Serena Ryder) also contributed to the mature and sophisticated sound of Make Someone Happy. After hearing Molly Johnsons latest album on the radio, Sophie was so impressed that she sought out its producer in the hopes that he would be interested in working on her next effort. To her delight, the response was positive and the result, in her words, inspiring:

Some of the songs on the album had been part of our live show for over a year and we needed a producer who could wrap his head around the material objectively. After the first meeting with Steve, I knew I wanted to work with him. He echoed my feeling of wanting to take listeners to a different place from the first album.

MacKinnon, along with Juno Award winning engineer John Beetle Bailey, helped to harness a studio experience that brought the best out in Sophie and her band. In all, they recorded 15 songs, two of which will feature as bonuses in select territories, and each is an individual reflection of Sophies soul.

The title track, a well-known Jule Styne composition, was brand new to Sophie when she first heard Carmen McRaes heartrending 1963 recording:

I heard it and just broke down in tears. The lyrics really reflected the emotional space that I was in, trying to process all the things that my life had become.

Make Someone Happy also features updated versions of some confirmed classics from the world of pop and rock. The 1980 Stevie Wonder composition, Rocket Love, presented an opportunity for Sophie to pay tribute to the man she calls her favourite artist of all time. Another track, Undun, brought the legendary Randy Bachman of The Guess Who to the studio, sitting in with Sophie and the band on their version of his 1969 smash. That was a moment that Sophie will never forget:

The Guess Who had some of the most interesting songs of their era, a totally unique style. We went out on a limb and emailed Randy Bachman to play on Undun. Miraculously, he said yes and it was one of my coolest musical experiences yet.

Included also are a playful update of Matchmaker, Matchmaker from Fiddler on the Roof, which features harmonica wizard Gregoire Maret, and the haunting original, Something in the Air Between Us, written by Steven MacKinnon and Marc Jordan. But it is perhaps the familiar (Its Not Easy) Bein Green, recorded by the likes of Ray Charles and Shirley Horn (but first made famous by Kermit the Frog), that most speaks the world as Sophie knows it and the person that her life has made her. All the moves, the migrations, the struggles, and the triumphs are summed up in the last line of the song:

Im green, and it will do fine. Its beautiful. And its what I want to be.

Sophie Milman, circa 2007: so much accomplished, and so much more to come. In other words, exactly what she wants to be.